![]() ![]() If the user then selected one of those virtual themes, the desktop module would then assume the shape and style of its icon equivalent. ![]() and for the clock module, and for the net/ram/cpu meter modules, etc.) as 'virtual' themes right at the top of that menu. This opens a menu displaying all themes that include skins for that desktop module, and allows you to, for instance, apply a specific theme only for that module.įirst I thought that I could add the two basic styles (e.g. Now, perhaps there is something I can do to work around this: when you right click a desktop module, one of the options in the context menu is 'Theme'. Otherwise, if a user selected the digital style for the clock icon module, from then on the desktop clock module would never again change shape regardless of what theme the user switched to, simply because no theme has a 'digital clock' skin for the clock desktop module. As such, they might take 'hints' from the currently selected style for that particular module, but that is as far as it goes. Icon modules have two styles/looks, desktop modules, however, only have one look. They do share some properties with their 'icon' equivalents, but their shape is usually different (unless the theme author did not include a skin for that module, in which case the desktop module would use the same shape as its icon equivalent). Thanks for the thumbs up, and for the screenshot.Īs you read and I explained elsewhere, desktop modules are free form and defined by the current skin/theme. ![]()
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